Houston Chronicle

Trading mixed as Fed rate increase looms

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Wall Street capped a choppy day of trading with a mixed finish for stock indexes Monday, as investors brace for another sharp interest rate hike by the Federal Reserve this week as the central bank combats inflation.

The S&P 500 edged up 0.1 percent after fluctuatin­g between gains and losses. The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 0.3 percent, while the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite fell 0.4 percent.

Smaller company stocks fared better than the broader market, sending the Russell 2000 0.6 percent higher.

The major indexes are coming off solid gains last week following a mix of mostly better-thanexpect­ed reports on corporate profits. Falling yields in the bond market also helped, easing the pressure on stocks after expectatio­ns for rate hikes by the Fed sent yields soaring much of this year.

On Wednesday, most economists expect the Fed to announce a three-quarter percentage point hike in its short-term rate, a second consecutiv­e hefty increase that it hasn’t otherwise implemente­d since 1994. It would put the Fed’s benchmark rate in a range of 2.25 percent to 2.5 percent, the highest since 2018.

Wall Street will closely watch a news conference by Fed Chair Jerome Powell on Wednesday to get a sense of policymake­rs’ next steps.

“The only question is will Powell sound a little less hawkish in his press conference, which could allow the market to continue to breathe a sigh of relief,” said Sam Stovall, chief investment strategist at CFRA.

The U.S. economy is slowing, but healthy hiring shows it isn’t yet in recession, Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen said Sunday on NBC’s “Meet the Press.” She spoke ahead of a slew of economic reports due this week that will shed light on an economy currently besieged by rampant inflation.

Since the Fed last met in June, the government has reported that inflation accelerate­d to a 9.1 percent annual rate, the most since 1981.

Still, some early signs suggest that inflation may be cooling from red-hot levels. Auto club AAA said on its website as of Monday that the average price of a gallon of regular gas is $4.36 per gallon. That’s down 16 cents from a week ago, and 55 cents cheaper than late June, when the average price was $4.91 per gallon.

Outside of the Fed meeting, the week’s highest-profile report will likely be Thursday, when the Commerce Department releases its first estimate of the economy’s output in the April-June quarter. Some economists forecast it may show a contractio­n for the second quarter in a row. The economy shrank 1.6 percent in the January-March quarter. Two straight negative readings is informally considered a recession.

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